If the cuts materialize to push oil prices up sustainably to $55 a barrel or more, the oil and gas industry will turn cash flow positive in 2017, marking the first upturn for sector since a prolonged downturn that started in the summer of 2014.

"If we stay (at $55 a barrel), the world's biggest oil companies start to make money again. If we go back down to $50 (or lower) in 2017...then those companies are in the negative territory and they go back into survival mode where they have been in the last two years," said Angus Rodger, the consultancy's research director for upstream oil and gas.

He expects OPEC and major non-OPEC countries that have pledged production cuts recently to mostly comply with their promise to cut a collective 1.8 million barrels a day from the market, he told CNBC's "Squawk Box".

At a compliance level around 75 percent, oil will average $57 a barrel through 2017, Rodger added.

Gains in prices however, will spur the resurgence of independent U.S. shale production,especially those in the Permian Basin in Texas with good access to capital and low break even prices, Rodger said.

Going into 2018 will be "tough" for the oil industry as higher fossil fuel prices will help shale production, that will weigh on oil prices again. Other factors, such as a strong dollar and demand will also influence prices,

Wood Mackenzie is forecasting oil prices averaging $55 a barrel in the next few quarters before they hit $60 a barrel by the end of 2017.